| Literature DB >> 32953375 |
Ilya L Novikov1, Boris I Ivanov1, Dmitri V Ponomarev1, Aleksey G Vostretsov1.
Abstract
We designed, implemented, and characterized differential amplifiers for cryogenic temperatures based on Si bipolar junction transistor technology. The amplifiers show high gain values of more than 60 dB at 300, 77, and 48 K. The minimum voltage noise spectral density was achieved at 77 K and corresponded to 0.33 nV/Hz0.5 with a flicker noise of 20 Hz. The maximum voltage gain was 70 dB at 77 K for a frequency range from DC to 17 kHz. We experimentally show that the parallel differential circuit design allows for a reduction of the voltage noise from 0.55 to 0.33 nV/Hz0.5 at 77 K.Entities:
Keywords: cryogenic amplifier; cryogenic low-noise amplifier; differential cryogenic amplifier; superconducting circuit readout
Year: 2020 PMID: 32953375 PMCID: PMC7476582 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.11.115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Schematic of the 0–120 kHz cryogenic LNA based on paired SSM2210 transistors. The important component values are: R1 = R2 = 100 Ω, R3 = R4 = 4.3 kΩ, C5 = 470 nF. The capacitors are realized in 0402 package (C0G type) and the resistors are realized as uMELF. The other passive components are used for filtering of the bias lines.
Figure 2The gain of the cryogenic differential BJT amplifier depending on the frequency at 77 and 300 K.
Figure 3The voltage noise spectral density of the cryogenic differential BJT amplifier as a fucntion of the frequency at 77 and 300 K.
Figure 4The gain of the cryogenic differential two-stage BJT amplifier as a function of the frequency at three different temperatures.
Figure 5The voltage noise spectral density of the cryogenic differential parallel BJT amplifier as a function of the frequency for three different temperatures. A spurious interference at 50 Hz and its harmonics are visible in the spectrum.